A singer, whose last album was described as “one of best British debuts of 2015” by the music press, is releasing a a new album sung entirely in Cornish.

With her debut album, 2014’s Y Dydd Olaf (The Final Day), Gwenno Saunders made a bold statement about the importance of protecting minority languages.

Drawing from her upbringing as the daughter of Welsh and Cornish language activists, and Welsh writer Owain Owain’s 1976 sci-fi novel of the same name, her psychedelic synth-pop opus won the 2015 Welsh Music Prize and Best Welsh Album at Wales’ National Eistedfodd, along with acclaim from The Observer (“these are songs brimming with ideas, both musical and political”) and Pitchfork (“one of the best British debuts of 2015”).

Nine of its ten songs were in Welsh; the last, Amser (Time), was in Cornish.

Gwenno launches the album in Cornwall in December

Working with long-time collaborator Rhys Edwards, the Welsh musician and singer’s next album, due in March 2018, continues her trailblazing mission, picking up exactly where Y Dydd Olaf left off. Written entirely in Cornish, Le Kov translates as “the place of memory”.

The album's title crystallises Gwenno’s relationship to the language - a fluent speaker of Cornish who has seldom ventured south of the River Tamar, let alone lived there. As a child, she imagined that Cornish held similar cultural weight to the Welsh language: a living, spoken tongue that coursed through everyday life. “How wrong I was!” she admits.

Read More

Yet the Cornish language has experienced a notable revival since the turn of the 20th century. There are now around 1,000 fluent speakers, locals were encouraged to claim Cornish identity on the 2011 census and in 2014 the Cornish people were granted minority status within the UK.

It’s huge progress but Gwenno wasn’t sure how she fit into all this.

Gwenno Saunders will perform Le Kov in Falmouth

Could she lay claim to any kind of Cornish identity? What she did know was that as one of the language’s few fluent speakers she felt a duty to make her next album entirely in Cornish: to create a document of a living language, to explore her identity and the endless creative possibilities of a tongue that has a very small surviving artistic output, despite having been around for at least 15 centuries.

Read More

I’ve heard a few tracks from the album and they are wonderful electronic pop odes to Cornish identity and myths, as well as added thrill of hearing Super Furry Animals’ Gruff Rhys singing about cheese in Cornish.

You can read an interview I did with Gwenno next month.

Gwenno will debut material from Le Kov with two special intimate shows in towns with a rich Brythonic heritage in early December, Merthyr Tydfil on December 1 and The Poly in Falmouth on Saturday, December 2.